+ Reply to Thread
Page 1 of 3 123 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 22

Thread: salesletters SUCK ... yup!

  1. #1
    VIP JVNP2 Partner
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Vancouver, B.C.
    Posts
    348
    My Thumbs Up

    salesletters SUCK ... yup!

    I sent this to my subscribers...

    Decided to post it to my pathetically ugly mini-blog ...

    but figured I'd toss it on here too. See what YOU think:

    ------------------------------------------------

    So I posted about one of my "mo*ney funnels" and mentioned the high conversions that my MoneyNowReport.com gets... even though I have pretty well no salescopy on there at all.

    (If you missed that post, head to the mini-blog at http://www.robthegenietoth.com )

    No bullet points. No long salesletter trying to sell the visitor on "opting-in".

    So why does it convert so much better?

    BECAUSE it doesn't have salescopy...

    Take a look at a screenshot of a squeeze page I saw from Ryan Diess just yesterday...

    ... I just posted it to the mini blog (RobTheGenieToth.com)...

    BTW... Ryan's business grosses 8-figures annually.

    no salescopy!!

    And think about the last 6+ month worth of promotions and launches. How many slideshow presentations vs. salespages are you seeing?

    we're all growing lazy in this department...

    I don't read salespages either.

    I know most don't even read INSTRUCTIONS let alone salescopy.

    Now, I don't want this to turn into a "is salescopy dead"... first of all, ad copy certainly isn't dead. But are long windeded salesletters the best way to present and sell a concept? I doubt it.

    Another few years and we'll probably be able to project a hologram of a robot-salesrep into the prospect's living room and have that hologram make the prospect a nice breakfast and tell it jokes while it goes about a complex, engaging sales presentation.

    Will you still be relying on salesletters then?

    Most of you probably even gave up reading this email.

    Sure, if I made it more engaging, more relevant... you'd read it all the way.

    Just like if your salescopy is interesting and relevant to a hot prospect, they'll read it.

    but in a marketplace of "too many choices", the REALLY HOT prospect is a minority. You get a lot of lukewarms. ANd you COULD close a lot of those lukewarms into sales, but it sure won't happen with just a plain old salespage.

    so what's the lesson?

    I don't know... play around with your delivery, think out of the box, test your conversions, use multimedia, create an experience, create interactivity ... but don't assume that if you have a headline, fancy copywriting and some bullet points that it will convert the best.


    - Rob


  2. #2
    Basic JVNP2 Partner
    Join Date
    May 2010
    Posts
    14
    My Thumbs Up

    Re: salesletters SUCK ... yup!

    Interesting post Rob, and many valid points!

    Occassionally I'll read a salesletter if I haven't really been pre-sold something, and I haven't got a clue what's really being sold.

  3. #3
    Basic JVNP2 Partner
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Posts
    9
    My Thumbs Up

    Re: salesletters SUCK ... yup!

    i be honest im very new to this online business stuff.

    initially i would read long ass salesletters to the very end as i didnt know anyhting about this business. im still trying to learn and i havent made any money online as yet.

    but in terms of long ass sales letters i dont read anymore, i simply join lists or trial products myself instead of reading the sales letters..

    for me reading long sales letters doesnt happen anymore. and i only started 3 months ago. i got fed up reading for half hour i dont think its necessary.

    but then.....maybe thats why i havent made any money online coz i dont use long sales letters.

    long sales letters......definitely not for me

  4. #4
    Basic JVNP2 Partner
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
    Posts
    188
    My Thumbs Up

    Re: salesletters SUCK ... yup!

    I agree that testing is the way to go. You make a good point in your very last sentence about having a headline, sales letter, and bullets and expecting it to work best every time.

    I kind of disagree on a few points though.

    First off, I'd like to point out that long-winded sales letters are never good for selling anything, simply because they're long-winded. On the other hand, if you have well-written copy that happens to be really long but is being shown to the ideal prospect, then it would lead to a sale. Of course, the ideal prospect might just head straight to the buy button.

    You're right that the hot prospect (or even the really hot prospect) is a minority, but I think you twisted the truth a little with that statement. Of course the hot prospect is a minority - otherwise, we'd regularly see 50%+ conversions rates with traditional sales letters and 90%+ conversions on upsells ;D

    The sales letter isn't the only thing that closes the sale. There's also emails and prior experiences with the product owner. In a launch, the pre-launch does much of the selling, hence the "sideways sales letter". I think that if you do that other stuff properly, it won't matter what you have right before the buy button because the person will either want or not want to buy. If they're not sure, they're probably not your ideal prospect.

    I know your aim with this thread was pretty much to help us squeeze more money out of the funnel, but wouldn't you agree that you shouldn't fix what ain't broke? I mean, if a sales letter is converting well, I'm not going to tear it down and start testing some sales videos.

    Just my opinion though.

    Curtis

    P.S. I often read emails, read sales letters, and watch sales videos, even if I'm not interested in buying/clicking/opting in. But of course, none of our personal preferences matter when it comes to marketing
    Curtis Ng (blog) - Product Launch Manager

  5. #5
    VIP JVNP2 Partner
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Vancouver, B.C.
    Posts
    348
    My Thumbs Up

    Re: salesletters SUCK ... yup!

    Sure thing Curtis.

    And that post was mostly just food for thought for those who want to consider/entertain my arguement. I don't expect everyone to agree, nor is it "written in stone" or gospel.

    But there's one final point (maybe a clarification) I'd want to make....

    Salesletters work. Yes.

    In direct mail, video isn't an option, audio isn't an option. So the letter has to sell.

    In print, same thing. Visual aides, proof, screenshots can be provided but no video, no interactivity, no audio, no nothing.

    BUT... step back and think of sales in general. A multi dimensional attack plan, one that hits all senses (hence the video that is actually just the audio of the merchant reading the salestext which is then displayed in a slideshow format is effective).. interactivity you'll never beat (engage the customer in anything and you'll JUMP conversions... hence seminars, webinars and surveys/quizzes that lead to the sale are all high conversion items).

    Point is... on the web, you can pretty well do any and all of them.

    So to stick with "here's my long salespage", good luck with that. Because even the best salescopy has a tough time fighting for the attention of a ADD customer in a *HYPER SATURATED MARKET* ...

    Again, if your offer is one of only a few good ones (or you're the only good one they find because your marketing actually reaches that prospect), then sure... you could force them to read a letter, write you a letter, fill out an application, make a phone call, do a rain-dance... whatever you want. Because if they want YOUR solution badly and you're one of only a few, then you can grip their attention.

    But that's far from the case in hyper-competitive, hyper-saturated markets like the IM space and biz opps spaces (for example).

    So what this means is if you're the guy with just a pretty graphic, pretty headline and even a $30,000 salesletter... you'll have a tougher time getting the attention of your user if I'm doing things like creating engaging flash games, surveys that lead to CUSTOM salespages, interactive videos, action-trigger audios etc etc.

  6. #6
    Basic JVNP2 Partner
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
    Posts
    188
    My Thumbs Up

    Re: salesletters SUCK ... yup!

    Yep, it makes sense to attack the prospect from multiple directions. That's something we can learn from the offline world, where we see ads on TV, billboards, the newspaper, radio, buses, the subway, flyers, bus shelters, etc. Imagine if we were only ever hit with through one advertising medium!

    As for a hyper-saturated market, I don't think IM is the best example. I would disagree that it is saturated at all, but even if it was, the IM market is different because we're generally accustomed to being sold to in certain ways.

    If you toss some random consumer from the street onto a sales page of any kind, they'd be like, WTF is this?! But as IMers, we see a bunch of them everyday, it seems. We're used to seeing them, we're used to putting them up, and we're used to buying from them.

    Even if many of us don't like them, it's what we're comfortable with.

    But again, I do agree that you can't just stick with a simple sales letter, no matter how good it is, and expect it to convert the best.

    There's always something you can do to improve conversions, even by the slightest bit.
    Curtis Ng (blog) - Product Launch Manager

  7. #7
    VIP JVNP2 Partner
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Vancouver, B.C.
    Posts
    348
    My Thumbs Up

    Re: salesletters SUCK ... yup!

    "If you toss some random consumer from the street onto a sales page of any kind, they'd be like, WTF is this?! But as IMers, we see a bunch of them everyday, it seems. We're used to seeing them, we're used to putting them up, and we're used to buying from them."
    Completely disagree. Sorry Curtis. Still love ya!!!

    Direct response and sales letters are used in all sorts of niches. And prospects from all sorts of markets do arrive at long scrolling sales letters... and, in other niches, where the delivery isn't as common, I'd venture to suggest that it converts better.

    The core reason why it doesn't work as well in IM is *BECAUSE* everyone automatically does it.

    Though now you'll see a continued wave of video pitches and less and less salesletters in the IM space because the savvy guys (look at the last 7 or so big ticket launches) already know the above... and now the general market is about to adapt it blindly because, well, that's what the general market always does.

    PS. Dan Kennedy's own latest offer is a video of him reading through a slideshow of bullet points (ie: it's salescopy in a powerpoint-type video). ANd he's a copywriter and sells copywriting courses, lol.

    re: hyper-saturated... definition: the prospects who are ACTIVE in the market have massive access to SUPPLY. There aren't THAT many internet marketers. There are plenty of biz opportunists who tell themselves they want to market and sell online but even if you want to include them in the IM space (though they belong in the biz opp category), it still doesn't change the fact that in THIS FORUM ALONE and through Mike mailings alone it's info product after info product after info product about internet marketing. The supply is everywhere. IM is certainly hyper-saturated.

  8. #8
    Basic JVNP2 Partner
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
    Posts
    188
    My Thumbs Up

    Re: salesletters SUCK ... yup!

    Haha, disagreement is good...it makes for good discussions!

    What I meant by "random consumer from the street", and I should have been more clear in my wording, was someone who isn't used to buying stuff online. Yes, copy is used offline as well, but even if it does happen to come in the form of a sales letter, it won't be the same as an online sales letter which involves scrolling, clickable links, minisite graphics, opt-in boxes, etc.

    As for your definition of "hyper saturated", you're right, there is MASSIVE supply. There also happens to be MASSIVE demand. That's why we, unfortunately, often see rehashed material being sold as original products. And, even worse, people keep buying this stuff.
    Curtis Ng (blog) - Product Launch Manager

  9. #9
    Basic JVNP2 Partner
    Join Date
    Oct 2009
    Posts
    13
    My Thumbs Up

    Re: salesletters SUCK ... yup!

    Rob,

    I finished reading part of your post before moving on, ending up at my email to find an email from Denny Hatch and this article: Why Americans Won't/Don't Read. http://www.targetmarketingmag.com/ar...nt-wont-read/1

    Almost makes me want to think.

    Andy

    This space was intentionally left blank

  10. #10
    VIP JVNP2 Partner
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Vancouver, B.C.
    Posts
    348
    My Thumbs Up

    Re: salesletters SUCK ... yup!

    Anyone can argue it all they want. I respect that. But I think it's a complete mistake.

    This isn't the days of yesterday.

    Just thinking "salescopy works because it always has" is a blanket statement and is false in many ways.

    We DO have SHARPLY reduced attention spans thanks to Skype dinging away, facebook telling us we have a message, text message coming in, cell phone call, landline call and on it goes

    Pre-internet, pre-cell phone, pre-TV crowds didn't have A HAIR OF A FRACTION of as much information and communications hitting them as today.

    Even in my FutureOfInfoMarketing.com series, I suggested (and other well-rounded entrepreneurs agreed) that BITE SIZED is the key. Quote of the day. 15 minute interviews. Sound bites, Exeucitve summaries.

    Some will jump in and say "well hold on, I still listen to 2 hour audios and I still read full books"... yes, but that person is a dying breed. Plenty such consumers out there, but even they have a lot more competing for their attention.

    In fact, that's another reason why "pre-launch pre-selling" works ... not just because it's multiple exposures or because it builds anticipation... but because it's a chunked down sales process. You pitch a few facts, a few features, a few benefits to the prospect in an email or a video... then you followup with another.

    Anyways, I stand by my arguement. There's not a single niche that I would use a long scrolling salesletter for these days ONLINE. I have video, audio and a million and one bells and whistles at my disposal that will engage and convert my prospect better. But it's almost asking for failure (or at least significantly reduced conversions) to do it in hyper competitive, hyper saturated markets.

    Thanks for posting that article.

    I skimmed it.

+ Reply to Thread
Page 1 of 3 123 LastLast

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts